Omg!!!!

sweetrav18

New member
Came home from work today and found both my fish were DEAD and my corals don't look good either. What could have caused this mass die off. I am so disheartened and ****ed. The tank parameters test out okay. Only thing that has changed in the past 24hrs has been the addition of a clam. Any ideas?
 
We can only help if you post more info. You say parameters are ok. What are they? What test kits are you using? How old is the setup? What type of clam? and Pics of course.....
 
what are your tank parameters? also what tpe of fish is that in your avatar? is it a gumdrop coral croucher? how is his personality im looking into getting one
 
readings are zero on trates, trites.

I have no pics but the water is normal looking (clear)

ITs a crocea

coral groucher has no personality its DEAD , it was very shy and hid alot but very pretty
 
How's the clam?

If the fish were picking at it they might have experienced death by clam compactor. It's known to happen.
 
what is your temp? could your heater have possibly malfunctioned? did you do a recent waterchange or add anything to the tank besides the clam such as chemicals?
 
temp is 79 deg. water change two days ago, but small I just changed out the water in the canister filter. Added two part nano reef solution. Very disppointing to say the least. Not really sure what to do I can stand to look at the tank without the fish. Makes you wonder why we deal with this.
 
maybe power went out and came back on before you came home. Last weekend saturday night I come home at 11 pm to find the room that my tank is in has all power out but every other room has power. Luckily my temp. didnt drop for some odd reason and everything is ok.
 
What's strange to me is that the new clam is fine. I'd figure that would be the first critter suffer if something went awry, mechanically or electrically.

What do you mean by "corals don't look good?" Are they melting or just closed? That might be clue.

Check all your electrical stuff. Maybe you have some stray voltage...?
 
not so sure that the clam would be the first to go. They can be surprisingly resilient...

WHen i moved from texas to oklahoma about 2 years ago, i moved all of my livestock and live rock into coolers and had them in the back seat of my car. In one cooler was a clam (attached firmly to a large piece of LR) and an anemone (also attached to a large piece of LR).

About an hour after i had packed up the car, i was saying my last goodbyes to a buddy when i noticed that the drain on the cooler had popped open - dumping about 15 gal of SW in the floor of my brand new bmw (but that's a whole different story...). I opened the cooler to find that the clam and anemone were "quite" dry and appeared they had been for some time. ****ed off and knowing they were both toast, i reached in and pulled the clam off the rock (tearing the foot). I tossed it in the grass... My buddy, who is a vet and not a SW guy picked it up and began prying the shell open. Just then, i noticed the clam try and retract a little. Surprised, i took it and tossed it into the cooler..."what the hay" right? I went by the LFS and bought some premade SW (of who knows what salinity, etc) and just dumped it in. ANyway, to make a very long story just a moderately long story.... that clam is still alive and well and has almost doubled in size. And i had always heard they were "fragile"

Sorry to hijack the thread...sorry for your loss.
 
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